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Modern Architecture 3.5.13

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MODERN ARCHITECTURE History of Architecture 2 ARTS AND CRAFTS MOVEMENT in Architecture (1860 to 1900) Revived an interest in handicrafts and sought a spiritual connection with the surrounding environment, both natural and manmade. ART NOUVEAU ARCHITECTURE (1890 to 1914) First expressed in fabrics and graphic design and spread to architecture and furniture in the 1890s. Buildings often have asymmetrical shapes, arches and decorative surfaces with curved, plant-like designs. BEAUX ARTS ARCHITECTURE (1895 to 1925) Also known as Beaux Arts Classicism, Academic Classicism, or Classical Revival, Academic classical architectural style that was taught at the École des Beaux Arts in Paris. Characterized by order, symmetry, formal design, grandiosity, and elaborate ornamentation. 20 th CENTURY ARCHITECTURE Two essential issues common: Functionalism Concern for social basis of Architecture Development in other arts (painting): Futurism Cubism DE STIJL “The Style” Group's principal members were: Painters: Piet Mondrian (1872–1944) Vilmos Huszàr (1884–1960) Bart van der Leck (1876–1958) Architects Gerrit Rietveld (1888–1964), Robert van 't Hoff (1887–1979), and J.J.P. Oud (1890–1963).
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MODERN ARCHITECTURE History of Architecture 2

ARTS AND CRAFTS MOVEMENT in Architecture (1860 to 1900)

Revived an interest in handicrafts and sought a spiritual connection with the surrounding environment, both natural and manmade. ART NOUVEAU ARCHITECTURE (1890 to 1914) First expressed in fabrics and graphic design and spread to architecture and furniture in the 1890s. Buildings often have asymmetrical shapes, arches and decorative surfaces with curved, plant-like designs. BEAUX ARTS ARCHITECTURE (1895 to 1925) Also known as Beaux Arts Classicism, Academic Classicism, or Classical Revival, Academic classical architectural style that was taught at the École des Beaux Arts in Paris. Characterized by order, symmetry, formal design, grandiosity, and elaborate ornamentation. 20 th CENTURY ARCHITECTURE

• Two essential issues common: – Functionalism – Concern for social basis of Architecture

Development in other arts (painting): – Futurism – Cubism

DE STIJL “The Style” • Group's principal members were:

Painters: – Piet Mondrian (1872–1944) – Vilmos Huszàr (1884–1960) – Bart van der Leck (1876–1958)

Architects – Gerrit Rietveld (1888–1964), – Robert van 't Hoff (1887–1979), and – J.J.P. Oud (1890–1963). –

• Dutch artistic movement founded in 1917 to 1931 • Known as neoplasticism (new plastic art) – artistic philosophy

Composition with Yellow, Blue, and Red, 1937–42, Piet Mondrian.

Rietveld Schröder House

The only building realised completely according to its principles

• Influenced by Cubist painting as well as by the mysticism and the ideas about "ideal" geometric forms (such as the "perfect straight line") in the neoplatonic philosophy of mathematician M.H.J. Schoenmaekers.

• Sought to express a new utopian ideal of spiritual harmony and order. • Advocated pure abstraction and universality by a reduction to the essentials of form and color; • Simplified visual compositions to the vertical and horizontal directions. Used only primary colors

along with black and white • The works of De Stijl would influence the Bauhaus style and the international style of

architecture as well as clothing and interior design. Proponents/ Architects:

– Mies van der Rohe as one of the most important proponents. – J.J.P. Oudcan in Rotterdam (Café De Unie) and Hoek van Holland

BAUHAUS

• “House of Building" or "Building School“ - term for a school in Germany that combined crafts and the fine arts, and famous for the approach to design that it publicized and taught. It operated from 1919 to 1933.

• Founded with the idea of creating a 'total' work of art in which all arts, including architecture, found by Walter Gropius in Weimar.

• Style became one of the most influential currents in Modernist architecture and modern design. • Schools:

1. Dessau from 1925 to 1932 and 2. Berlin from 1932 to 1933)

The Institution called for a new "rational" social housing for the workers.

• Rejection of "bourgeois" details such as cornices, eaves, and decorative details. • Use principles of Classical architecture in their most pure form: without ornamentation of any

kind. • Buildings have flat roofs, smooth facades, and cubic shapes. • Colors are white, gray, beige, or black. • Floor plans are open and furniture is functional.

The BAUHAUS school disbanded when the Nazis rose to power. Walter Gropius, Ludwig Mies van der

Rohe, and other Bauhaus leaders migrated to the United States. The term International Style was applied to the American form of Bauhaus architecture.

Examples of Bauhaus and the International Style: 1. The Seagram Building 2. The Gropius House 3. The Farnsworth House 4. Philip Johnson's Glass House 5. The Transco Building by Philip Johnson 6. United Nations Headquarters by Le Corbusier 7. The Miller House by Richard Neutra 8. The Lovell House by Richard Neutra 9. The Bauhaus Building in Dessau, Germany 10. Furniture by Bauhaus Architects

Architects Inspired by the Bauhaus Movement

1. Walter Gropius 2. Le Corbusier 3. Richard Neutra

4. Philip Johnson 5. Mies van der Rohe 6. Marcel Breuer

VILLA SAVOIE, Poissey (1929-31) embodying Le Cobusier’s 5 points of

new architecture:

1. Free standing supports – pilotis 2. Roof gardens 3. Free plans 4. Ribbon windows 5. Freely composed facades

The house became “ a machine for living in” 20TH C. TRENDS IN ARCHITECTURE (1900 to Present) The century has seen dramatic changes and astonishing diversity. Twentieth century trends

include Art Moderne and the Bauhaus school coined by Walter Gropius, Deconstructivism, Formalism, Modernism, Structuralism, and Postmodernism.

STRUCTURE AND TECHNOLOGY Norfolk Scope , Virginia 12,600-seat multipurpose arena Precast dense concrete reinforced with steel mesh to roof large public spaces by an Italian

architect/engineer Pier Luigi Nervi (1891-1979 Precast dense concrete reinforced with steel mesh to roof large public spaces by an Italian

architect/engineer Pier Luigi Nervi (1891-1979) –Geodesic Dome

• Reinforced concrete shell was pushed to the edge with the Sydney Opera House

INTERNATIONAL STYLE

• used to describe Bauhaus architecture in the United States.

Le Corbusier's United Nations Secretariat building, New York

• America's International Style became a symbolism of Capitalism: while German Bauhaus architecture had been concerned with the social aspects of design.

• Favored architecture for office buildings, and is also found in upscale homes built for the rich. • Variations of the International Style had evolved in the mid 20th c.

INTERNATIONAL STYLE used to describe Bauhaus architecture in the United States. Examples of Bauhaus and the International Style:

1. The Seagram Building 2. The Gropius House 3. The Farnsworth House 4. Philip Johnson's Glass House 5. The Transco Building by Philip Johnson 6. The Miller House by Richard Neutra 7. The Lovell House by Richard Neutra 8. Furniture by Bauhaus Architects

MODERNIST ARCHITECTURE has these features:

• Little or no ornamentation • Factory-made parts • Man-made materials such as metal and concrete • Emphasis on function • Rebellion against traditional styles

Architects 1. Rem Koolhaas 2. I.M. Pei 3. Le Corbusier 4. Philip Johnson 5. Mies van der Rohe

ART DECO ARCHITECTURE (1925 to 1937) Zigzag patterns and vertical lines create dramatic effect on jazz-age, Art Deco buildings.

Chrysler Building New York City, USA For a few months, it was the tallest structure in the world. It was also one of the first buildings

composed of stainless steel over a large exposed surface. It has jazzy automobile ornaments - eagle hood ornaments, hubcaps and abstract images of cars.

It evolved from many sources - austere shapes of the Bauhaus School and streamlined styling of modern technology combined with patterns and icons taken from the Far East, classical Greece and Rome, Africa, Ancient Egypt, India, and Mayan and Aztec cultures.

Features of Art Deco buildings: 1. Cubic forms 2. Ziggurat shapes: Terraced pyramid with each story smaller than the one below it 3. Complex groupings of rectangles or trapezoids 4. Bands of color 5. Zigzag designs 6. Strong sense of line 7. Illusion of pillars

It evolved from many sources - austere shapes of the Bauhaus School and streamlined styling of modern technology combined with patterns and icons taken from the Far East, classical Greece and Rome, Africa, Ancient Egypt, India, and Mayan and Aztec cultures.

Features of Art Deco buildings:

Photo © Thomas Northcut / Getty Images

1. Cubic forms 2. Ziggurat shapes: Terraced pyramid with each story smaller than the one below it 3. Complex groupings of rectangles or trapezoids 4. Bands of color 5. Zigzag designs 6. Strong sense of line 7. Illusion of pillars

More Art Deco Buildings 1. Empire State Building, New York City 2. Radio City Music Hall, New York City 3. Art Deco Buildings, Queens, New York 4. Art Deco, Miami

Art Deco Architects 1. William Van Alen 2. Raymond Hood

MODERNISM

Museum of Art

at Cornell University

I.M. Pei, Architect - Herbert F. Johnson

Photo © Jackie Craven

• Emphasizes function.

• It attempts to provide for specific needs rather than imitate nature. • The roots of Modernism may be found in the work of Berthold Luberkin (1901-1990), a Russian

architect who settled in London and founded a group called Tecton who believed in applying scientific, analytical methods to design.

Modernist architecture can express a number of stylistic ideas, including: 1. Structuralism 2. Formalism 3. Bauhaus 4. The International Style

Mid-Century, or Mid-Twentieth Century, Modernism 1. Brutalism 2. Minimalism

Museum of Art at Cornell University

I.M. Pei, Architect - Herbert F. Johnson

Photo © Jackie Craven

Example: Berlin Holocaust Memorial by Peter Eisenman Photo (cc) cactusbones/Flickr.com

• Based on the idea that all things are built from a system of signs and these signs are made up of opposites: male/female, hot/cold, old/young, etc.

• Design is a process of searching for the relationship between elements. • Complexity within a highly structured framework. • Design may consist of cell-like honeycomb shapes, intersecting planes, cubed grids, or densely

clustered spaces with connecting courtyards. EXPRESSIONISM Evolved from the work of avant garde artists and designers in Germany and other European countries

during the 1ST decades of the 20TH c. Key features are:

1. distorted shapes 2. fragmented lines 3. organic or biomorphic forms 4. massive sculpted shapes 5. extensive use of concrete and brick 6. lack of symmetry

Example: Einstein Tower (Einsteinturm), Potsdam by Erich Mendelsohn, 1920

NEO –EXPRESSIONISM • Built upon expressionist ideas. • Architects in the 1950s and 1960s designed buildings that expressed their feelings about the

surrounding landscape. • Sculptural forms suggested rocks and mountains. • Organic and Brutalist architecture

Expressionist and Neo-expressionist Architects 1. Gunther Domenig 2. Hans Scharoun 3. Rudolf Steiner 4. Bruno Taut 5. Erich Mendelsohn 6. Walter Gropius (early works) 7. Eero Saarinen

CONSTRUCTIVISM

• Buildings emphasized abstract geometric shapes and functional machine parts. • Combined engineering and technology with political ideology. • Russian architect Vladimir Tatlin launched the movement when he proposed the futuristic,

glass-and-steel Tatlin's Tower. Example: Model of Tatlin's Tower

Part of the 2008 exhibit, "From Russia," Royal Academy of Arts,London

Press Photo, Royal Academy of Arts Features of constructivist buildings:

STRUCTURALISM

• Glass and steel • Machine-made building parts • Technological details such as antennae, signs, and projection screens • Abstract geometric shapes • A sense of movement

Constructivist Architects: 1. Vladimir Tatlin 2. Konstantin Melnikov 3. Nikolai Milyutin 4. Aleksandr Vesnin and his brothers Leonid and Victor Vesnin 5. El Lissitzky 6. Vladimir Krinsky 7. Iakov Chernikhov

FUNCTIONALISM

“Form follows function," Louis Sullivan became a dominant trend in Modernist architecture.

• Believed that the ways buildings are used and the types of materials available should determine the design.

• The philosophy was followed more closely by Bauhaus and International Style architects. • Toward the end of the 20th c., the term Functionalism was used to describe any practical

structure that was quickly constructed for purely practical purposes without an eye for artistry.. • Strive for "honest" approaches to building design that focused on functional efficiency.

Example: Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut by Louis I. Kahn who sought honest

approaches to design

BRUTALISM • French phrase béton brut, or raw concrete, to describe the construction of his rough, concrete

buildings. • Grew out of the Bauhaus Movement and the béton brut buildings by Le Corbusier and his

followers. • Heavy and angular buildings can be constructed quickly and economically.

Common features include: 1. Precast concrete slabs 2. Rough, unfinished surfaces 3. Exposed steel beams 4. Massive, sculptural shapes

Example: Paulo Mendes da Rocha Residence, São Paulo, Brazil FORMALISM Interest in visual relationships between the building parts and the work as a whole. Found in Bauhaus

and International Style architecture. 1. Emphasis in form. 2. Shape, often on a monumental scale, is the focus of attention. 3. Lines and rigid geometric shapes predominate.

Example: Bank of China Tower, 1990, by Ieoh Ming Pei

In the later decades of the twentieth century, designers rebelled against the rational Modernism and a variety of post modern styles evolved.

Examples of post modern architecture include:

1. Postmodernism 2. High Tech 3. Organic 4. Deconstructivism

HIGH TECH Buildings are often called machine-like

• Steel, aluminium, and glass combine with brightly colored braces, girders, and beams. • Many of the building parts are prefabricated in a factory and assembled later. • Support beams, duct work, and other functional elements are placed on the exterior of the

building, where they become the focus of attention. • Interior spaces are open and adaptable for many uses.

High Tech Architects: 1. Richard Rogers 2. Norman Foster

Example: Centre Pompidou, France by Richard Rogers, Renzo Piano, and Gianfranco Franchini.

POST MODERN First examples are generally cited as being from the 1950s, but which did not become a movement until the late 1970s Return of "wit, ornament and reference" to architecture in response to the formalism. Described as "neo-eclectic", where reference and ornament have returned to the facade, replacing the

aggressively unornamented modern styles. Examples: Portland Public Service Building. Esplanade of Europe by Ricardo Bofill, Montpellier(1978-2000). ORGANIC ARCHITECTURE Promotes harmony between human habitation and the natural world through design approaches so sympathetic and well integrated with its site that buildings, furnishings, and surroundings become part of a unified, interrelated composition.

DECONSTRUCTIVISM OR DECONSTRUCTION

• Approach to design that attempts to view architecture in bits and pieces. • Basic elements of architecture are dismantled. • Buildings may seem to have no visual logic. They may appear to be made up of unrelated,

disharmonious abstract forms. • Deconstructive ideas are borrowed from the French philosopher Jacques Derrida.

Architects: 1. Peter Eisenman 2. Frank Gehry 3. Richard Meier 4. Rem Koolhaas

Example: Main Central branch of the Seattle Public Library by the Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas,

opened in 2004.

En d of HOA 2 compilation….LYM 3.5.13


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